While crossing rural America in their
dilapidated station wagon, a Midwestern family finds a baby at a rest stop,
recently birthed and abandoned in a Chex party mix box. This is only
the beginning of a wild goose chase across the cornfields and back highways of
the heartland.

Bridget Bedard is originally from Utah, but now lives and works in New York
City, where she recently completed her MFA in Film at New York University.
Her work has been supported by many grants and Foundations, including the
National Endowment for the Arts, the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and
Sciences, and the Dick Vague Foundation. For her work on "Baby," she
was
recently named Best Female Student Director of 2001 by the Director's Guild
of America. It premiered at Sundance, 2001.

"Baby" premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, 2001, and subsequently
screened at the New York University Showcase in the Clermont-Ferrand Short
Film Festival, France. It was recently named the sole
recipient of the
Wasserman Screenwriting Award at New York University's First Run Festival,
while also winning a King Foundation award for directing.
Consequently it
screened at the Director's Guild of America, Los Angeles, in New York
Magazine's Evening of Superior Films. It was highlighted in
"Best of
Sundance" at the Nashville Film Festival, and won Best Short Film in
the
USA film festival, Dallas.

A blob finds a mysterious box that fell from the sky in
this computer-animated short film.

Stefan Gronsky's computer graphics and filmmaking obsession
began at age 6 with an Apple Macintosh 512KE and a Sony 8mm video
camera. A self-taught artist/filmmaker, Stefan is studying computer
science at UC Berkeley. He has worked at Tippett Studio and interned
at Pixar.

A microbe’s four billion year journey across the solar system to find home.

After Eric Anderson received his degree from the University of
Kentucky, he began writing and making short films in earnest along with
delivering many, many pizzas. He is now directing his thesis film at the
University of Southern California.

Size Matters
A short film by Eric Juhola
2001/color/21 mins/16mm

A young girl is sent to Fat Camp where she rebels the only way she can -
by eating...and before long, the whole camp gets involved.

Bio:
Born and raised on the South Shore of Boston, Eric received a Bachelor
of Fine Arts from New York University's Kanbar Institute of Film &
Television.

WaldemarDirected by Michael Blank2001/color/3minIn
the dry, empty desert landscape roams a powerful wizard, Waldemar.
He is invincible (that it what we are to think). Yet on his long
path through the desert we learn that even Wizards have
limitations to their power.

Join
Edgar, the man, and Gigi, the dog, on a casual stroll through a wacky cut
and paste neighborhood filled with drunk clowns, smoking grandmas, and
sidewalk preachers. Who knows what may be down the next block, or what
lies in store for Gigi at the end of the Walk?

Bio:
Jeff Drew is a 1996 graduate of John Herron School of Art in Indianapolis,
Indiana with a degree in Fine Art and Illustration. He later moved to
Albuquerque, New Mexico, and as luck would have it, he stumbled onto the
animation program at the local community college, TVI. Jeff currently resides
in Albuquerque, working as a freelance illustrator and animator, with his wife,
who is a teacher, and their four cats, who don’t do much of anything.

Principal Cast and Credits Everything was created by Jeff Drew, excluding the main theme music,
“Powerhouse Pop”, which was composed and performed by Keith Mansfield, 1969
KPM Music Ltd. And the old smoker ladies voice at the very end was my lovely
wife, Portia Sharp.

ContactJeff Drew Pictures
(505) 265-1556 automatedrew@aol.com
No website at this time, but look for one soon!